Post-Tribune

Grifol doesn’t need a T-shirt slogan to win back disgruntle­d White Sox fans

- Paul Sullivan

During a postgame news conference last June at Guaranteed Rate Field, Chicago White Sox manager Tony La Russa showed up wearing a T-shirt with the word “FAMILY” spelled out in capital letters above the team’s logo.

It was clearly a message of unity during a trying time for both the Sox and La Russa, who was in the spotlight for some head-scratching in-game decisions.

During a June 11 home game against the Texas Rangers, the first volley of “Fire Tony” chants was heard at the ballpark.

“They are coming to the game and they can say whatever they want,” infielder Jake Burger said afterward. “I know this clubhouse is a family and we are going to stick together no matter what. You can have outside opinions, but this clubhouse, we are tight and it’s a family.”

La Russa is gone now and the Sox “FAMILY” T-shirts are collectibl­es. The players themselves didn’t actually believe they were a family, it turns out, but they kept it top secret while the T-shirts were on sale.

Maybe that’s the lesson from the 2022 season: You can’t always believe what you read on a T-shirt.

Did everyone “Keep On Truckin’+”) in the 1960s when the R. Crumb T-shirt became a fashion trend? Were we all smiling in the ’70s when the “Have a Nice Day” smiley-face T-shirts became ubiquitous?

There was no reason to believe the Sox were a family just because they shared a clubhouse, just like you and your fellow office workers might have disagreeme­nts from time to time. Teams throughout baseball history that fought each other and won are legendary, including the notorious Oakland A’s bunch that pulled off a three-peat in the early ’70s.

You don’t have to be a family to win. And truth be told, no Sox fan cares if players consider themselves a family as long as they’re winning.

This season’s Sox can change

the narrative under new manager Pedro Grifol, who has been tasked with getting everyone on the same page without the benefit of a T-shirt-friendly motto.

From my brief interactio­ns with Grifol at the start of Sox camp, he seemed to be a very serious man who has a very rigid schedule and an urgency to prepare the right way. He promised a “loose environmen­t” once the work gets done, insisting he’s “having a great time” in spite of his serious dispositio­n.

“And you know I’m having a great time because I’ve got a great staff. We’ve got morning meetings, we’ve got like 25 to 30 guys in there,” he said. “They’re extremely creative, they’re working and I’m just a reflection of them.”

Deferring to his coaching staff suggests Grifol doesn’t have a sensitive ego and understand­s the team’s hoped-for success will be the culminatio­n of a group endeavor. It’s not all about him.

The players have responded to the change at the top of the family, which is to be expected. When La Russa arrived in camp in 2021, he got a ringing endorsemen­t from shortstop Tim Anderson, who said he was behind his new manager “110%.”

“I can tell him anything I want to,” Anderson said with a grin. “I ain’t afraid of him. Tell him that.”

New year. New manager. Same Anderson.

“We’re creating new energy, creating a new culture,” Anderson recently told MLB Network. “And I think it’s led by the right man as well. I think the biggest thing is communicat­ion.”

Grifol’s strength as a communicat­or was stressed by general manager Rick Hahn when he hired the 53-year-old Kansas City Royals bench coach, who had no major-league managerial experience and was unknown to the majority of Sox fans.

“In Pedro we are hiring someone who is a renowned communicat­or, a modern baseball mind who is seeking to build a cohesive and inclusive clubhouse environmen­t and one where the attention to detail and the accountabi­lity will be priorities,” Hahn said at the introducto­ry news conference.

“At the end of the day, after (Chairman) Jerry (Reinsdorf ), (executive vice president) Kenny (Williams) and I sat down with Pedro, it was very clear to all three of us he would be the unanimous choice to address some of the things we needed to improve.”

Through no fault of his own, Grifol immediatel­y had to deal with some controvers­y when pitcher Mike Clevinger was allowed to participat­e in camp in spite of an MLB investigat­ion into domestic violence and child abuse allegation­s made by the mother of Clevinger’s daughter.

Clevinger then threatened in a Chicago Sun-Times interview to sue WSCR-AM 670 for defamation over further allegation­s the mother made in an on-air interview. For a team in desperate need of a cultural change, it couldn’t have started any worse.

But now that MLB has closed its investigat­ion with no disciplina­ry measures taken against Clevinger — and no lawsuit has been filed by the pitcher — we’ll see if normalcy can be quickly restored.

Clevinger is scheduled to start in his first Cactus League game Saturday as he prepares for the regular season, which begins March 30 in Houston. He agreed to submit to evaluation­s by the joint treatment boards of MLB and the MLB Players Associatio­n and to follow any recommenda­tions, according to MLB’s statement.

Though the investigat­ion may be closed, Hahn’s signing of Clevinger will be scrutinize­d the rest of the season. Will Sox fans embrace him? That question probably won’t be answered until after his first home outing.

Grifol has many more worries than whether Clevinger can succeed as a fifth starter. He needs rebound years out of Yasmani Grandal, Yoán Moncada, Lucas Giolito and others. He needs to find a reliable closer while Liam Hendriks recovers from non-Hodgkin lymphoma. And he needs a healthy and motivated group to avoid another season like the disappoint­ment of 2022.

What he doesn’t need is a T-shirt showing what a tight-knit group they are.

If the 2023 Sox really are a family, they can prove it on the field.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP ?? White Sox manager Pedro Grifol pauses in the dugout before a spring training game against the Guardians on March 1.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP White Sox manager Pedro Grifol pauses in the dugout before a spring training game against the Guardians on March 1.
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